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The Labour Reforms of 1945 - 51. Want – The family Allowance Act 1945 (This act was passed by the wartime coalition government, but implemented by Labour).
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Want – The family Allowance Act 1945(This act was passed by the wartime coalition government, but implemented by Labour) • Family allowances were one of Beveridge’s ‘three assumptions’ (i.e. three things which were needed to make the social security system workable, the others being an NHS and an avoidance of mass unemployment). • 5s per week was to be given for each child after the first. • It was the legal entitlement of the mother, not the father. • The amount was very small, even by 1945 standards, but it was hoped that it would help to keep wage demands down.
Want – The National Insurance Act 1946 • This was the most important of all the acts to tackle want and it is what most of Beveridge’s recommendations were about. • This was an extension of the previous system of National Insurance introduced in 1911. This time, however it was UNIVERSAL and COMPREHENSIVE. • Contributions were at a flat-rate of 4s 11d per week (about 5% of average earnings). • There were 7 benefits: • Unemployment (between 180 and 492 days) • Sickness (after 156 contributions) • Maternity • Widow’s Pension • Guardian’s Allowance • Retirement Pension • Death Grant. • Benefit levels were 26s per week (42s for a couple)
Want – The Industrial Injuries Act 1946 • This was an extension of previous legislation, but it was UNIVERSAL and COMPULSORY. • Workers were covered for this through their existing National Insurance con tributions. • Benefit levels were 45s per week, which was generous. • This was paid by the government, not employers.
Want – The National Assistance Act 1948 • This act was designed to be a safety net for those who could not make National Insurance contributions, and therefore would not receive the benefits of the National Insurance Act (e.g. the disabled, the long-term sick, pensioners) • National Assistance Boards were set up. • Claimants would be means-tested and benefits would be in the forms of one-off discretionary grants. • This came to be relied on much more than the Labour Government expected it would be, as National Insurance benefits were low.
Want - Analysis Collectively, these acts did provide care from the ‘cradle to the grave’ and finally did away with the poorhouse. However, the government had rejected Beveridge’s subsistence principle and benefit levels were low. This meant that National Assistance, a supposed safety net, came to be relied on far more than anticipated.
Ignorance – Butler’s Education Act 1944 Labour implemented this act passed by the wartime coalition. The most important terms of the Act were: • The school leaving age should be raised to 15, and 16 as soon as possible (although this didn’t happen until 1972). • There were to be three stages of education – Nursery, Primary and Secondary. Primary and Secondary education were compulsory (and free). • Pupils should sit an examination at 11 in England (the 11-plus), or 12 in Scotland (the ‘qualy’). Their results would determine which type of Secondary school they would go to. Those that passed would go to a grammar school (England) or a Senior Secondary school (Scotland) for an academic education. Those who did not pass would go to a Secondary Modern school (England) or a Junior Secondary (Scotland) for a more practical education.
Education – School Building A school building programme was a priority because: • Many schools had been damaged or destroyed during the war. • The school leaving age was raised and secondary education was made compulsory. By 1950 1,176 schools had been built or were under construction.
Ignorance - Analysis Very few technical schools were built, so a two-tier system developed. There was supposed to be ‘parity of esteem’ between Grammar and Secondary Modern schools, but it was clear that a first-rate, second-rate structure had been put in place. This reflected and exacerbated social and class divisions in society as a whole. This divisive system was also not suited to late developers. In general, Labour did not do enough to address the educational needs of working-class children.
Disease – The NHS 1946 • The Act was passed in 1946 and implemented on the ‘Appointed Day’ - 5 July 1948. • Aneurin Bevan was Minister for Health and Housing. • 9% of the funding for the NHS came from National Insurance, the rest came from taxation. • At first, 2/3 of doctors were opposed to the scheme, but Beveridge got over this opposition by allowing consultants to retain their private patients and guaranteeing them a fee per patient.
Disease – The NHS (contd.) The NHS was to be free at the point of use and provided: • GPs • Specialist treatment • Hospital treatment • Dentists • Opticians • Prescriptions • By 1950 the cost of the NHS was £358m • In 1951 charges had to be introduced for prescriptions, dental care and eye care. • Bevan resigned as Health Minister when this happened.
Disease - Analysis • This was a major reform and a hugely successful one. The massive demand for NHS services after 1948 gives an indication of just how much this reform was needed. The enormous expense of the system came as a shock. By 1950, the cost was £358m. Given the constraints of the post-war economy, charges had to be introduced for prescriptions, spectacles and dental treatment. Bevan resigned in disgust at this. Nevertheless, the NHS clearly was, ‘arguably the biggest single achievement in the story of the welfare state.’ (R.C. Birch)
Squalor – Council Housing • Bevan (Minister for Health and Housing) restricted private house building so that materials and labour could be used for council house building. • From 1945 – 51 four council houses were built for every one private house • 500,000 council houses were built in total.
Squalor - Prefabs • These were intended to be a temporary stop-gap to the housing shortages. • The houses would come ‘pre-fabricated’ from a factory and be assembled quickly on site. • 157,000 were built in total and many lasted for decades.
Squalor - Squatting • In the summer of 1946 there were still serious housing shortages. • Desperate families took to squatting in disused army barracks and camps. • The Government did not prosecute them. In fact, Local Authorities were ordered to provide basic services (gas, water etc.) to these squatters.
Squalor – New Towns • The New Towns Act of 1946 tried to solve the problem of overcrowding in the cities by planning new communities. • Twelve New Towns were planned. Four were built in Scotland (East Kilbride, Glenrothes, Cumbernauld and Livingston)
Squalor - Analysis Historians have been kinder to this Labour Government on the issue of housing than the electorate were in 1951. The continued housing shortage was one of the main reasons that Labour lost the 1951 election. The 1951 census showed that there were still 750,000 fewer houses than households. Labour’s record on house-building does not compare well with that of previous governments – for example the National Governments of the 1930s. However, given the social and economic circumstances of the time – the post-war economy, the shortage of building materials and skilled workers, labour should not be judged too harshly on this issue.
Idleness • Unemployment rose from 1945 – 47 when demobilised servicemen and women came home. It peaked at 480,000 in 1947 and fell thereafter. • Unemployment never returned to the massive levels of the 1930s. • The Labour Chancellor – Hugh Dalton described low unemployment as ‘the greatest revolution brought about by the Labour Government’
Idleness(contd.) Labour do deserve some credit for this: • Negotiating Marshall Aid from the USA and using this money to subsidise the rebuilding of Britain’s infrastructure, thereby creating jobs. • Nationalizing certain industries (coal, electricity, steel, gas, railways, the Bank of England), although this did more to protect than create jobs.
Idleness(contd.) However, many of the reasons for low unemployment were nothing to do with what Labour did. • The ‘Baby Boom’ removed many women from the workforce. • Export industries boomed (cars, motorcycles, chemicals) and this created many jobs.
Idleness - Analysis The numbers of unemployed remained low – especially when compared to the 1930s. Hugh Dalton, the Labour Chancellor claimed that ‘full employment was the greatest revolution brought about by the Labour Government’. Unsurprisingly, this assertion is not completely true. Low unemployment is due to a mixture of the government’s policies, private industry, local councils and the Baby Boom.
Did the Labour Reforms establish a welfare state? There little doubt, that by 1951 a welfare state was in place in Britain. Despite the faults of the new system, secondary education was now available to all up to the age of 15. The government made a firm commitment to ridding Britain of squalor and, for the first time, accepted responsibility for mass unemployment. More importantly, there was a comprehensive universal system of social security, although benefits were low. There was also a comprehensive, universal, free health service – the jewel in the crown of the British welfare state. From birth to death, the British citizen was truly now cared for from the ‘Cradle to the Grave’.
However, the labour Government of 1945-51 built on the foundations of a welfare state laid by the Liberals from 1906-14. The Second World War had also made the completion of the welfare state inevitable. Beveridge himself said that his plans were more an evolution than a revolution a - ‘natural development of the past’. Thus, whilst the Labour Government may not have been the creator of the welfare state, the universal and comprehensive Labour reforms, marked the completion of the British welfare state.
Did the Labour Reforms meet the needs of the British people? • The Labour Party chairman claimed in 1950 that ‘Poverty has been abolished, hunger is unknown. The sick are tended. Our old folks are cherished, our children are growing up in a land of plenty.’ • This statement contains the level of exaggeration that would be expected from a politician. • Some of the ‘Five Giants’ were tackled more successfully than others.
Rowntree’s survey of poverty in York in 191 showed that only 2.8% were living below the poverty line, compared to 31.1% in 1931. It is fair to say that ‘Want’ was comprehensively tackled. • There was less success with ‘Ignorance’ and ‘Squalor’. Reform of education was not as comprehensive as Labour would have liked and, ironically, it was a Labour government that oversaw the introduction of a socially divisive education system. • There were still huge housing shortages in 1951, which contributed to Labour losing the 1951 election to the Conservatives. ‘Squalor’ remained a huge issue. • Unemployment remained low, thus, it is fair to say that ‘Idleness’ was successfully tackled, but Labour cannot claim all the credit for this.